1-800-AUTOPSY - Key Persons


Soon Herrera

Soon Herrera's reputation spread to the legal community. Requesting his services were the likes of attorneys Johnnie Cochran and Milton Grimes. Local, state, and federal institutions also turned to Herrera's young company to provide postmortem services and tissue procurement.

Vicki Herrera

Job Titles:
  • President / Family Coordinator

Vidal Herrera - CEO, Founder

Job Titles:
  • CEO
  • Founder
Vidal Herrera has nearly 40 years of experience working within hospital and medico-legal forensic environments. His first hospital position at the LAC/USC medical center, was as a Nursing Attendant. After numerous advancements within the hospital, Herrera landed at the county morgue as a Mortuary Attendant. Taking advantage of on-the-job-training programs, Herrera began volunteering under then-Los Angeles County Chief Medical Examiner Thomas Noguchi, known as the "Coroner to the Stars," exposing him to countless high profile celebrity homicide investigations. Shortly thereafter, in 1979, Herrera was promoted as a Field Deputy Coroner-Investigator for the Los Angeles County Chief Medical Examiner-Coroner. Realizing that his extensive and specialized skill sets were needed by others, Herrera began offering independent private autopsies in the southern California area. During his tenure as Investigator, Southern California was experiencing an unprecedented rise in serial killings, i.e., The Hillside Strangler, The Skid Row Slasher, The Freeway Slasher, The Grim Sleeper (Strawberry Killer) and The Night-stalker. These landmark investigations led to a ‘coming of age' in forensics, where for the first time forensic science played a key role in identifying criminals. In the summer of 1984, while responding to a call, Herrera was instrumental in identifying Richard Ramirez (The Night-stalker) leading to his eventual prosecution and incarceration. One month later on August 28, 1984 he sustained a career-ending lower back injury while lifting a body at a crime scene. Major spinal surgery ensued, forcing him into retirement, where over the course of four years, he fought to regain his ability to walk. Leaving his wheel chair behind, Herrera was eager to work again. In the years following his retirement, Herrera came to see the public's need for autopsies being overlooked by the medical community.